“Our health is the dearest treasure we have. The more we learn about the ways to protect
it, the larger blessing it becomes”
Doctor Phil Tardani
The
professor does not cease to surprise me. This time he had been invited to attend
a symposium on Cancer and Cell Mutations, that took place in Vesenaz, a small
suburb of Geneva , Switzerland
“Prof,
I did not know that you were also interested in such scientific disciplines. I
always thought that your research objectives in the Life Sciences remained
within the areas of large scale prevention of the more common illnesses and continuous
encouragement for research.”
“Wrong
conclusion on your part” replied the Professor. I have done work on Genetics
and recently have looked at the most deadly of all cellular deficiencies.
Cancer is still a major killer; cure and treatment of some of its many forms so
far, has enjoyed a modest success. As in the case of DNA manipulation in stem
cells, cancerous genes demand a special treatment. The difference is that such cancer
research does not attempt against any procedures that might offend moral,
ethical or religious ideas as is the case with Stem Cell research.”
Like
most of the Professor’s projects in these important areas, his contribution was
not limited to funding but also to actual work in development and the time
consuming activity in the coordination of the various entities and specialists
involved. I became instantly curious; he would not engage in such a delicate area
unless there was something that could yield positive results. I said:
“If
you promise to explain to me in terms that can be understood by a Junior High
student, I shall be glad to brew the coffee, cut a few pieces of that Belgian
Coffee cake, warm them in the microwave and pour two modest shots of Remy
Martin!”
He
laughed and answered;
“Agreed. While you busy yourself in the pantry, I
shall look at my notes.”
In
few minutes we sat down in front of the coffee table where the tray of goodies and the coffee were on
display. He begun:
“The
starting point of this project is simply that the genes of a person with cancer
have been successfully decoded and in the process they found a set of mutations
that may be the cause of the disease.”
“How
did they managed that?”
“The
cells of a patient who died from leukemia sequenced all the DNA from her cancer
cells and that allowed for comparison
with the DNA from her healthy cells. In the process, they identified several
mutations in the cancer cells. These were responsible for abnormal growth and
somehow neutralized the effects of chemotherapy, which has been partially
successful in the elimination of mutant cells.”
Aware
that the Professor would enlighten me and in the process throw at me a few
hundred new scientific terms, I had to ask:
“What
the heck is that DNA genome sequence that seems so popular this day? Popular
among the learned ones, that is.”
‘Think
of DNA as a string of pearls, except that we call the pearls nucleotides and
the string a genome. Now, what they discussed in Vesenaz was an update on some
of the more salient conclusions of the Human Genome Project in the year 2000,
which produced the largest DNA sequence ever assembled.”
“How
about that ‘sequencing’ that is often mentioned/’
“It
is a biochemical method used to determine the order of bases in the nucleotide
string and from there identification can be made of mutants and other
deficiencies. Since cancer is strictly a disease of the genome, it is important
to know about the rules that affect some of those components that take the
wrong way!”
We
honored some of the cake and after a cautious sip of the cognac, I asked the
Professor:
“Where
do stem cells figure in all this?’
“So
far we can only guess. The field of application is limitless. In few words, my
friend, stem cells can be used in what I would call ‘tissue engineering’, or
the possibility to patch up or build entire sections of organs using the
patient’s own cells. This way if you rebuild some tissue or organ in your body,
you will not need that eternal need to take strong medicines that will protect
you against rejection.”
I
continued to be amazed at the possibilities that new scientific investigations
are beginning to suggest eventual cure for all ailments and probably eternal
life. I said so.
The
Professor laughed:
“Not
so fast, my friend. Do not plan to stem cell yourself and expect that there
will be a marked improvement in your ballroom dancing or, more important, in
your golf game. My own research of your aptitudes in such important fields is
that there is no hope!”
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